Things Which We Ought Not to Have Done. written and read by Tenniel Evans
The Rector's children, when they were in their teens, used to play a game called Sermon Cricket, which was almost enough to make Matins bear-. able.
Producer PAMELA HOWE BBC Bristol

Contributors

A collection of country tales written by HARRY IBBETSON and told by Bernard Miles A Trip to the Sea
' I never shall forget it, I never shall, not so long as ever I live. None of us had ever seen the sea afore - save only Mark Roper, and I don't reckon he'd seen it proper ..." Music performed by THE JACK EMBLOW TRIO
Producer DANNY GREENSTOIO

Contributors

Introduced by Sue MacGregor
A View from the Continent' a regular reflection of events and reactions in the rest of Europe.
2.0-2.2 News
' My Wife Anoints Her Face So Why Can't If ': JUDY GRAHAM looks into beauty treatments for men's figures and faces
Gentle Words Jor the Gentle Sex: GILLIAN STRICKLAND With her monthly review of newly-published women's magazines. Brown Alpaca or Grey Wincey: VICTORIA ROWE , at 90, tells JEAN GOODMAN about her childhood in an orphanage. In The Frame (3)
Editor WYN KNOWLES

Contributors

Our Young Mr Wignall by DAVID NOBBS
Alistair Wignall, a young salesman on a business trip to the North, is out for a good time and chases all the girls. But it's his senior colleague, Charles, who really knows where the action is.
Directed by ALFRED BRADLEY BBC Manchester

Contributors

There aren't any good brave causes left. If the big bang does come, it won't be in aid of the old-fashioned grand design. It'll be for the Brave-New-Nothing-very-much-thank-you. About as pointless and inglorious as stepping in front Of a bus. (JOHN OSBORNE
Look Back in Anger)
On Good Friday 1958, several thousand people marched out of Trafalgar Square bound for Aldermaston to demonstrate their support for nuclear disarmament. That march set the pattern for those protest rituals which characterised the British Easter during the 1960s.
Ian Rodger looks back at the occasion, with the voices of PAT ARROWSMITH , JOAN BAKEWELL HUGH BROCK , JAMES CAMERON OLIVF GIBBS and CHRISTOPHER LOGUE
Producer ALASTAIR WILSON

Flood Gates for What?
Presented by Mary Goldrlng
The Thames Barrier is not just a way of keeping flood water out of London. It is a major piece of public expenditure. Its costs have gone up from £230-million to at least £440-million. Industrial relations have been bad, the cost of storing the gates until they are needed is f2-million. Is this inevitable, or is it another example of insufficient control of large projects?
Producer GREVILLE HAVENHAND

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